Tag Archives: Brick

Manipulate The Elements In Eternal Strands, Yellow Brick Games’ Debut Action Adventure Title – Game Informer

  1. Manipulate The Elements In Eternal Strands, Yellow Brick Games’ Debut Action Adventure Title Game Informer
  2. Former Bioware/Ubisoft Devs Are Making A New Action-Adventure Called Eternal Strands – IGN First IGN
  3. Former Dragon Age creative director Mike Laidlaw finally reveals his next game: A physics-based action-adventure ‘in which the world becomes your weapon’ PC Gamer
  4. Former Dragon Age boss’ new action-RPG Eternal Strands out next year Eurogamer.net
  5. Former Dragon Age director’s new game has Zelda’s physics powers and Colossus’ climbable bosses Rock Paper Shotgun

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San Fran Mayor London Breed, city leaders booed out of drug-infested UN Plaza as brick thrown in crowd – New York Post

  1. San Fran Mayor London Breed, city leaders booed out of drug-infested UN Plaza as brick thrown in crowd New York Post
  2. Protester arrested for throwing brick during San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s chaotic open air drug hearing Fox News
  3. Mayor Breed’s SF drug crisis meeting interrupted by boos, shouting, brick thrown in crowd KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  4. S.F. official confronts Mayor Breed over ending ‘drug supermarkets’ San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Outdoor San Francisco city meeting moved inside after protester throws brick toward stage NBC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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San Fran Mayor London Breed, city leaders booed out of drug-infested UN Plaza as brick thrown in crowd – New York Post

  1. San Fran Mayor London Breed, city leaders booed out of drug-infested UN Plaza as brick thrown in crowd New York Post
  2. Protester arrested for throwing brick during San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s chaotic open air drug hearing Fox News
  3. Mayor Breed’s SF drug crisis meeting interrupted by boos, shouting, brick thrown in crowd KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  4. S.F. official confronts Mayor Breed over ending ‘drug supermarkets’ San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Outdoor San Francisco city meeting moved inside after protester throws brick toward stage NBC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Hyper’s new Thunderbolt 4 hub has laptop charging power but no brick

Hyper, the company behind those stackable GaN chargers and powerful battery banks, is running a Kickstarter for a Thunderbolt 4 hub that’s truly compact thanks to the fact that it doesn’t need a massive power brick like the ones that weigh down other hubs. Instead, it plugs straight into the wall with a relatively standard figure-eight power cable, letting you add fast ports to your computer without eating up a bunch of backpack or desk space.

Despite the simplicity, Hyper says it’ll still be able to provide up to 96 watts of power to your laptop, which is enough to power most laptops (if you have a gaming computer or a 16-inch MacBook Pro, though, it may still lose some battery while going at full-tilt). As with most Hyper products, though, the hub doesn’t come cheap; Hyper says it’s expected to retail for around $299 when it releases.

You can do a lot with three Thunderbolt 4 ports.
Image: Hyper

As a Thunderbolt 4 hub, it gives you a few more ports to work with. The front has four Thunderbolt ports. You plug your computer into one and then whatever disks, displays, or other accessories you want into the other three. Hyper says that its 32Gbps PCIe speeds (which equates to 4x for PCIe 3.0 or 2x for PCIe 4.0) are fast enough for external GPUs and that the ports can provide 15W of power to devices like an iPad Pro. It should also be compatible with most fancy monitor setups; Hyper says the hub supports tech like Display Stream Compression and the multi-stream transport tech required to run two 6K screens at 60 Hz.

The hub uses GaN to provide a lot of power for your computer and your other devices.
Image: Hyper

Obviously, you’re paying a lot for the convenience of not having an external power brick (which helps makes the hub more portable). For the price of the hub, you could get a full-on Thunderbolt 4 dock that adds several other ports. Hyper is offering Kickstarter backers a significantly lower price (anywhere from $179 to $239, depending on which tiers have stock left), but there is inherently some risk to that. Yes, by this point, Hyper is a reputable brand with plenty of successful crowdfunding campaigns under its belt, but there’s still a difference between a Kickstarter preorder and buying something directly off a website. The company says it expects the hubs to start making their way to backers in November.

If your pockets aren’t quite so deep or you don’t mind putting up with a little inconvenience, OWC’s Thunderbolt Hub may be worth a look. It also lets you add three Thunderbolt 4 ports to your computer, as well as a USB-A port (it even runs at 10 Gbps). At $169, it’s a fair bit cheaper than Hyper’s version — but it will have to be attached to a massive power brick, and it can only manage 60W of charging.

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Paul Sorvino: A Voluble Man Who Excelled as a Brick of a Mobster

When Paul Sorvino was offered the role of Paulie Cicero, the Queens-based mob underboss in Martin Scorsese’s “Goodfellas” (1990), he very much did not want to accept it. In the first place, he was a proud Italian American. A connoisseur of Italian culture, particularly food and music, he was not inclined to play a Mafioso. In addition, Sorvino, who died Monday at 83, was a voluble guy, and he liked playing voluble guys. Paulie was largely a brick. Much is made in the early scenes of the movie about how most of the criminal’s directives were executed with a mere nod.

He accepted the role anyway and went into rehearsals. A few days before shooting began, he called his agent and asked if he could bail. At a 2015 panel at the Tribeca Film Festival commemorating the 25th anniversary of “Goodfellas,” Sorvino poked a little fun at people who complimented him on his “choices” in what became one of his signature roles. He scoffed at the idea of “choices,” insisting: “I found the guy and the guy made the choices.”

“It was very difficult,” Sorvino told the panel moderator Jon Stewart. “I’m a poet, I’m an opera singer, I’m an author … none of it is gangster.” But then, for Sorvino, came a moment. In his telling at this panel, it was when he was straightening his tie. In other recountings, he was removing a bit of spinach from between his teeth. In both versions, Sorvino looked in the mirror. And there was a fixed scowl meeting him.

“I saw this guy.” And that was it.

Sorvino’s vision of Paulie was an incredibly nuanced portrayal of a man who, on the page, comes across as simple and as unpleasant as sudden death. In “Wise Guy,” the nonfiction book that was the basis of “Goodfellas,” the author Nick Pileggi wrote, “It was understood on the street that Paul Vario” — the mobster’s surname was changed for the movie — “ran one of New York’s toughest and most violent gangs.” In the Brownsville-East New York area of the city, “the body counts were always high, and in the 1960s and 1970s the Vario thugs did most of the strong-arm work,” Pileggi explained, adding later, “There were always some heads to be bashed on picket lines, businessmen to be squeezed into making their loan-shark payments, independents to be straightened out over territorial lines, potential witnesses to be murdered, and stool pigeons to be buried.”

Vario, then, was a middle manager of mayhem. Sorvino played him as a guy who kept his cool and tried to keep his underlings in line.

Much of “Goodfellas” (streaming on HBO Max) is devoted to how three underlings, played by Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci and Robert De Niro, did not stay in line. Paulie can be a tolerant and affectionate “dad.” Sorvino uses his natural warmth when greeting “good earner” Jimmy (De Niro) at a back-room casino early in the movie. Later, overseeing elaborate dinners in prison, he has a special system for slicing garlic, and once his cellmate Henry (Liotta) enters bearing wine and Scotch, he proclaims, “Now we can eat.” Presiding over a celebration of Henry’s release from the joint, he’s Uncle Paulie.

But it’s when he’s playing the brick that Sorvino kills. At that celebration, he brings Henry into his backyard. Henry had been dealing drugs in prison, with Paulie’s tacit approval. Now in fixed-scowl mode, Paulie tells Henry to “stay away from the garbage.” When Henry plays dumb, Paulie isn’t having it. “Don’t make a jerk out of me. Just don’t do it.” Without losing any of the character’s outer-borough intonations, Sorvino clips the words like he’s snapping necks.

Henry and his merry men are either paying tribute to Paulie with a percentage of their ill-gotten gains or lying to his face. These character dynamics are complicated — Paulie seems too sharp to not know he’s being deceived, but what can he do about it? One thing he can do is eliminate Joe Pesci’s Tommy from the group, using brother Tuddy Cicero (Frank DiLeo) as his lethal proxy.

Paulie’s final words to Henry — “Now I gotta turn my back” — are as chilling as any of the movie’s grisliest sights.

Sorvino’s decades-long career was checkered. One of his first leading roles was as a male rape victim in a highly misbegotten 1974 ABC Movie of the Week called “It Couldn’t Happen to a Nicer Guy.” In the 1974 version of “The Gambler” (available to rent or buy on major platforms) he played his first mob-adjacent character, a bookie named Hips, but this character was no Paulie: he has a genuine personal affection for the title character (James Caan), Hips’s most screwed-up and indebted client.

For another taste of the more voluble Sorvino, his turn as Curtis Mahoney, a federal agent posing as an investigative journalist in Mike Nichols’s much-maligned 1974 “The Day of the Dolphin” (available on Kino Now), is worth looking into. Far from an accomplished mole, Mahoney is a too-chatty bumbler. Sorvino is also memorable as Edelson, the commanding officer of the undercover cop Burns (Al Pacino) in William Friedkin’s “Cruising” (from 1980; rent or buy on major platforms). Assigning his underling to work the gay sex-club underworld of Manhattan in search of a killer, Edelson inquires into Burns’s sexual history with the most blunt question imaginable, not batting an eyelash.

Both before and after “Goodfellas,” Sorvino was a regular presence in pictures directed by and starring Warren Beatty, most recently “Rules Don’t Apply” (2016). Sorvino’s post-“Goodfellas” filmography veered between solid character roles in indies like “The Cooler” (2003) and James Gray’s “The Immigrant” (2014) and the usual gigging-actor dreck.

In 2018 the world learned how passionate Sorvino could be offscreen. Responding to revelations of abuse and blackballing that his daughter, the actor Mira Sorvino, endured at the hands of disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein, Sorvino told TMZ he hoped Weinstein would do jail time: “Because if not, he has to meet me.” Sorvino then related in no uncertain terms what would happen.

The role of a proud father driven to indignant, justified rage was one that suited this performer well enough. But one wishes that he hadn’t been obliged to live it.

Glenn Kenny is a critic and the author of “Made Men: The Story of ‘Goodfellas.’”

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LEGO to invest more than $1B in Virginia brick plant

LEGO is planning to invest more than $1 billion to construct a U.S. manufacturing plant near Virginia’s capital of Richmond, according to Gov. Glenn Youngkin

“I’m thrilled to officially welcome @LEGO_Group to Virginia,” Youngkin tweeted. “They will invest over $1 billion to construct its first manufacturing plant in Chesterfield County, creating over 1,760 new jobs. We look forward to a successful partnership.” 

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announcing LEGO’s arrival in his state.  (Twitter@GovernorVA / Fox News)

He added: “The LEGO Group’s decision to establish its U.S. manufacturing plant in Virginia shines a global spotlight on the advantages that make the Commonwealth the best business location in the nation, and we look forward to a long and successful partnership with this iconic company.” 

The Virginia factory, expected to open in 2025, will be the LEGO Group’s seventh factory globally and the second in the Americas, joining a site in Mexico, according to a company news release. 

LEGO AND NEW YORK CELEBRATE COMPANY’S 90TH ANNIVERSARY EARLY WITH WEEKLY SURPRISES

The 1.7 million-square-foot Virginia facility, featuring a carbon-neutral design, will mold, process and pack LEGO products and ensure they meet the company’s safety and quality requirements.

It will be located in a publicly owned industrial park in Chesterfield County, about 20 miles south of Richmond near Interstate 95. All of its day-to-day energy needs will be matched by renewable energy generated by an onsite solar park, the company pledged.

Legoland New York Resort has a 20-foot-tall birthday cake on display for The Lego Group’s 90th anniversary. (Legoland New York Resort / Fox News)

“We were impressed with all that Virginia has to offer, from access to a skilled workforce, support for high-quality manufacturers, and great transport links,” Niels Christiansen, CEO of the family-owned company headquartered in Billund, Denmark, said in a statement. “We appreciate support for our ambition to build a carbon-neutral run facility and construct a solar park and are looking forward to building a great team.”

The company will be eligible for a range of taxpayer-funded incentives, including a performance-based grant of $56 million and site development improvements subject to legislative approval estimated to cost up to $19 million, a news release said.

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Construction is expected to commence this fall and a temporary packaging site will open in an existing building nearby in early 2024, creating up to 500 jobs, according to the company’s news release.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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Apple Discontinues iPod, Mobile Gaming Icon, After 22 Years

Photo: Justin Sullivan (Getty Images)

Pour one out for every kid who one-strapped a backpack in middle school, as they’re likely in mourning today. With Apple’s discontinuation of the 7th-generation iPod Touch, announced yesterday, it’s official: the iPod is dead.

Ostensibly, the iPod was a music device, meant to digitize song libraries and move listeners away from the limitations and galactically better sound quality of physical media. (Whether such a shift was good for the music industry is, of course, another story.) But over its many iterations, the iPod also heralded another revolution: that of mobile gaming.

Once upon a time, mobile gaming consisted of playing Brick or Snake on your parents’ dusty Nokia. And sure, following its 2001 launch, the iPod—which literally featured a shoddy port of Brick following the device’s 2001 launch—had a similar landscape for a while. Over the next few years, the offerings grew, but not by much. In 2006, EA released iPod versions of minted classics like Sudoku and Solitaire. Kaplan, the for-profit educational behemoth, released a series of SAT prep study courses (to which I can only say: lol). Compared to other mobile gaming devices of the era, like, say, the Nintendo DS, the iPod was hardly revolutionary.

Then came the iPod Touch.

First released in 2007, the iPod Touch totally reimagined the iPod’s design. Rather than a brick with a wonkily controlled track wheel, the iPod Touch looked a lot like its contemporary, the iPhone: sleek, rectangular, affixed with a glass touch screen that coated its entire silhouette. Unlike the iPhone, you couldn’t use an iPod Touch to summon and instantly lose the courage to dial up your crush from algebra. But if you had a Wifi connection, you could download a bunch of games that’d at least distract you during algebra.

And some of the games of the era were truly excellent. Fruit Ninja! Tap Tap Revenge! Words with Friends! Temple Run practically created, or at least widely popularized, a new genre, laying the groundwork for truly terrific endless runners like Alto’s Odyssey. Personally, I had a soft spot for Doodle Jump, a platformer that cast you as an elephant (?) wearing a jetpack. The visuals, stylized to look like a lined paper notebook, are inked in memory. But for me, at least, it was also an early introduction to the wider world of leaderboards.

Some games, quality aside, went on to become legit cultural behemoths. Angry Birds spawned a feature film, along with crossovers with Star Wars and Transformers, and a gazillion other spin-offs. (My grandmother once bought me an Angry Birds bath mat, presuming that, seeing as I like video games, I must like Angry Birds, the only video game.) The impact was undeniable.

Raise your hand if these ads left an indelible impact on you, too.

And so, news of the iPod’s death set off a spirited wave of nostalgia in Kotaku’s Slack this afternoon.

Staff editor Lisa Marie Segarra shouted out pretty much all of the games listed above, and further pointed to the iPod as a catalyst for the indisputable Candy Crush craze. She also praised the tilt controls that came with some games, which were “so innovative at the time. Or at least it felt like it.”

“What a time to be alive,” added staff writer Zack Zwiezen. “I truly miss the older era of the App Store. … No doubt we have great stuff today, but I can’t help but long for those simpler times when I drank fake beer and played with knock-off lightsaber apps.”

The times are indeed less simple. Rather than the handful of must-play options, Apple’s gaming ecosystem is bigger than ever, as major games—everything from blockbusters like XCOM and Genshin Impact to indie sleeper hits like Sayonara Wild Hearts and Baba is You—make their way to the App Store. Apple Arcade, a subscription service that grants access to a library of games, is slowly becoming an essential scouting ground for under-the-radar gems. (Many Apple Arcade games eventually make their way to Nintendo Switch or traditional consoles, where they become ‘legitimized’ in the eyes of the hardcore player, something that goes on to obscure mobile game origins.)

But every time one of these once-essential devices gasps its final breath, I find myself struck at the finality—how everything, no matter its apparent staying power or cultural impact, is ephemeral, a fleeting moment you don’t realize was fleeting until it’s gone. As they say: Wouldn’t it be nice to recognize you’re living in the good times when you’re actually living in the good times? I think so.

Anyway, yeah, RIP to the iPod. You had a good run. You’ve left a good legacy. And to really get all mid-2000s: Thnks fr th Mmrs.

 

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Towers Rise Over London’s Brick Lane, Clouding Its Future

LONDON — Ornate English and Bengali typography adorns the signs of Taj Stores, one of the oldest Bangladeshi-run supermarkets in the Brick Lane neighborhood of East London. The signs evoke a part of the area’s past, when it became known as “Banglatown,” and eventually home to the largest Bangladeshi community in Britain.

But Brick Lane’s future is looking very uncertain, said Jamal Khalique, standing inside a supermarket opened in 1936 by his great-uncle and now run by Mr. Khalique and his two brothers.

Modern office buildings of glass and steel and a cluster of apartments and cranes tower above the skyline. New coffee shops, restaurants, food markets and hotels appear in the neighborhood each year. According to one study, the borough of Tower Hamlets, which contains Brick Lane, had the most gentrification in London from 2010 to 2016.

In September, a borough committee approved plans — under discussion for five years — to build a five-story shopping mall in and around a disused parking lot beside a former brewery complex that houses independent shops, galleries, markets, bars and restaurants.

The project would include brand-name chain stores, office spaces and a public square.

Like many Brick Lane residents, Mr. Khalique is ambivalent about the development. Initially, he was not opposed. “I’ve seen a hell of a change from a deprived, dirty area, to a trendy, diversified, multicultural area,” said Mr. Khalique, 50.

But now he worries that the new shopping center will undermine the area’s architectural character by adding glass features amid the weathered brick, and will siphon customers from long-established stores. “It will really kill small, independent businesses,” he said.

In a statement, Zeloof Partnership, which owns the brewery site and a handful of other nearby properties, said the new center would create several hundred jobs, mostly for local people. Its design was consistent with the look of the area and did not involve demolishing buildings, the statement said.

It added that a fixed discount for rent would be offered to a select number of independent businesses currently operating from the brewery.

The company said there was no firm date yet for when construction would start or when the new center would open.

The plans have met fierce resistance from some local residents and campaigners.

The district’s member of Parliament, Rushanara Ali of the opposition Labour Party, said residents had expressed concerns about the “limited concessions” made by the developers, adding that the Conservative government had reduced “local powers and accountability to local communities” over development.

Opponents of the development also argue that it could cause rents and housing prices to rise in what has long been a working-class area.

In December 2020, a “Save Brick Lane” campaign gained widespread attention online, in part through the participation of Nijjor Manush, a British Bangladeshi activist group. The borough council received more than 7,000 letters of objection, though only several hundred were from local residents, a sign of what a point of contention the proposed development had become beyond just Brick Lane.

In September last year, soon after Zeloof’s plans were approved, campaigners and residents marched in protest, unfurling “Save Brick Lane” banners behind pallbearers carrying an empty coffin to represent what they describe as the corrosive effects of gentrification.

Still, not everyone is opposed to the plans.

“Brick Lane was dying a long time ago,” said Shams Uddin, 62, who arrived in the area from Bangladesh in 1976 and has been the proprietor of Monsoon, one of the many Bangladeshi-run curry restaurants that once flourished in the neighborhood, since 1999.

Indeed, in the past 15 years, 62 percent of Brick Lane’s curry restaurants have closed because of rising rent, difficulties obtaining visas for new chefs and a lack of government support, according to a study by Runnymede Trust, a research institute focusing on racial equality.

Mr. Uddin said that international travel restrictions imposed by the pandemic, the chilling effect of Brexit and the opening of franchises in a historic market area nearby had deterred customers from visiting. In this environment, he said, the new shopping center could lift up the waning businesses around it.

“When customers finish their business with the shopping center, they may come to my restaurant,” he said. “This is a good thing for our business.”

The changing face of Brick Lane is startling to many longtime residents who remember the many empty properties in London’s East End five decades ago.

“This area had been abandoned,” said Dan Cruickshank, a historian and member of the Spitalfields Trust, a local heritage and conservation group.

When he bought his home in Spitalfields in the 1970s — a property that had stood empty for more than 10 years — Mr. Cruickshank said he struggled to secure a mortgage. East London, he said, was “deemed dark, dangerous, remote and to be avoided” by mortgage lenders and property developers.

Now, in what Mr. Cruickshank derides as a “peculiar case of gentrification,” homes in Brick Lane have acquired a Midas touch. Average property prices in the neighborhood have tripled in little over a decade, according to real estate agents’ collations of government data, with some soaring over millions of dollars.

With the average home in London costing nearly 12 times the average salary in Britain, affordable housing options are scarce.

For centuries, Brick Lane has been a sanctuary for minority communities: Huguenot silk weavers who fled religious persecution in 17th-century France, Ashkenazi Jews escaping antisemitism and pogroms in Eastern Europe, and then Bangladeshi Muslims in the 1970s, during Bangladesh’s fight for independence from Pakistan and the ensuing violence. Since the 1990s, it has become a symbol of multicultural London, celebrated in novels, memoirs, movies and museum exhibits.

In the 1970s, Bangladeshis were drawn to Brick Lane by cheap places to live and abundant work opportunities in the textile industry.

But the arrivals were greeted by discriminatory housing policies and occasional racist violence from followers of the National Front — a far-right British political party with headquarters nearby. Racists smeared swastikas and “KKK” on some buildings. Mr. Khalique, the grocery store owner, said he was permanently scarred on his right leg when he was attacked in his youth by a dog belonging to a National Front supporter.

Hundreds of Bangladeshi families squatted in empty properties in defiance of the attacks — squatting was not then a criminal offense in England — while demanding better housing options.

Among those families was Halima Begum’s. For years, as a child, she lived in a derelict building marked for demolition until her father, a factory worker, broke into an abandoned flat close to Brick Lane. Ms. Begum lived there until she left for college.

Now the director of Runnymede Trust, Ms. Begum has witnessed Brick Lane’s transformation into what she described as a “tale of two cities,” where wealthy workers from the neighboring financial district live in an area with what the charity Trust for London says are the capital’s highest child poverty rates.

Overcrowding is rampant in Tower Hamlets, where more than 20,000 applicants await low-income housing. Opponents of the shopping center point out that the plans do not include any social housing.

“How on earth would British Bangladeshi communities who are experiencing significant poverty be able to maintain a lifestyle where this area develops into Manhattan?” she said, citing the gentrification of the East Village in New York City in the 1980s. “The way in which we regenerate has to be more inclusive.”

Occasionally, the pushback has gone beyond petitions and local laments. A cafe specializing in hard-to-find varieties of breakfast cereal, which some held up as the ultimate example of “hipsterfication,” was vandalized in 2015 by anti-gentrification protesters. (The business closed its doors in Brick Lane in July 2020, but it continues to run a store online.)

Aaron Mo, 39, who in July last year opened a pop-up Chinese bakery, Ong Ong Buns, near the planned development, is cautious about predicting the shopping center’s effect on small independent businesses like his.

But he said he learned something instructive when, a nearby branch of the sandwich chain Pret A Manger unexpectedly closed for two weeks last year. The effect was palpable, he said: “We got more customers.”

For Mr. Khalique, the concerns about gentrification go beyond business — they are also deeply personal.

Outside his store, Brick Lane’s history is visible in the lamp posts painted in green and red, the colors of the Bangladeshi flag, and in street signs that are in both English and Bengali.

“Our elders have fought really hard for this area,” he said of his father’s generation. “It’s in my blood.’’

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Anker’s four-port 120W power brick is built for the USB-C warrior

Anker’s newly available 547 Charger may be a power brick to consider if you frequently travel with lots of USB-C devices or are in charge of keeping your family’s devices topped up (via 9to5Toys). Despite its relatively compact size, it packs four USB-C ports that are capable of putting out 120W of power at once.

The $120 charger has two 20 watt ports for phones or tablets and two higher-power ports, one of which is capable of providing up to 100W (or 90W if you have a phone plugged into one of the 20W ports).

Charging bricks with four USB-C ports aren’t exactly common, which can be annoying now that so many devices are compatible with the standard. Plus, with 120W, you should be able to charge a maxed-out 14-inch MacBook Pro and a phone at the same time, though it is a bit of a bummer that you’ll be doing so at 90 / 20W instead of 100 / 20 (we’ll get into some more weirdness around this in just a moment).

Along with the high price, there are also a few quirks to this charger. Instead of having some flip-out prongs, it uses a nearly five-foot-long cable. While that’s good for some situations, it’s not the most compact thing for travel (though it is thankfully detachable).

You’ll also probably want to keep the chart showing it adjusts output wattages around. You’ll get different charging speeds depending on which port you’re plugged into and how many devices you have plugged in. While it’s understandable that each port can’t supply 100W no matter what, you won’t be able to just plug in your most power-hungry laptop without thinking. Thankfully, the two ports on the right should be good for charging phones at a reasonable speed in any configuration, and there are little icons to show you which ports are designated for phones or higher-power devices.

You’ll definitely have to pay attention to which ports you’re plugging things into.
Image: Anker

While it doesn’t seem like we’ve got the perfect charger just yet, this seems like a good addition to the lineup. If you’ve got a bunch of USB-C devices and need to charge them all at once with a relatively compact brick, the 547 Charger is definitely worth a look.

If you’re still living with some USB-A devices, Anker also sells the 100W PowerPort Atom PD 4, with two USB-C ports and two USB-A ports. You can currently get it on Amazon for $110 if you use the $20-off coupon (there’s also a 65W version with one USB-A port for $70). If you tend to travel light and use lower-power devices, you could also check out the two-port USB chargers available from brands like RavPower and Anker.

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Why macOS updates might brick your Mac, and what you can do about it

Apple

Anecdotal reports from over the weekend indicate that the macOS Monterey update may be bricking some Macs during installation, leaving the machines unresponsive. MacRumors has rounded up a representative swath of complaints from the Apple Support Communities forums and Twitter, mostly describing the same symptoms: unresponsive Macs that can’t be revived using the typical SMC and NVRAM diagnostic catch-alls.

The reports rounded up by MacRumors mention multiple Intel Mac models, ranging from the 2015 model year all the way up to 2020, but don’t mention Apple Silicon models—this makes some sense, since they update a bit differently than Intel Macs and may not be susceptible to the same problems.

We’ve asked Apple about these anecdotal reports to see if there are any issues the company is aware of or guidance it has for people whose hardware stops responding to input after a software update. We also have our own recommendations, as well as some hypotheses about why these major updates sometimes seem to cause a higher-than-usual number of hardware problems.

macOS updates aren’t just updating macOS

When Apple releases new macOS updates, you aren’t just getting updates to the operating system. Since 2015 or so, Apple has also distributed most firmware updates as part of the operating system rather than doing it separately (this also includes updates to the “bridgeOS” software that runs on Apple T1 and T2 Macs). For PC owners, imagine Windows updates that could also update your computer’s BIOS or graphics firmware.

This saves steps for end users, who get the benefits of firmware-level security and feature patches just by keeping their software up to date. Apple’s firmware patches contain mitigation for hardware-level vulnerabilities like Spectre, Meltdown, and their ilk, and Apple also issued updated firmware with macOS High Sierra to add APFS boot support to older Macs.

But bundling in firmware updates also adds complexity. If your Mac is unplugged or runs out of battery during a firmware update, that might render it unable to boot and unable to be revived through the typical methods. And because they are more intensive and take longer than a typical software update, both firmware updates and major OS updates can occasionally unearth underlying hardware issues with RAM, storage, or other components.

How to fix (and try to avoid) these problems

Apple T2 and Apple Silicon-based Macs can be put into DFU mode and have their firmware restored by a second Mac running Apple Configurator 2.

Apple

If you’re using an older Intel Mac without an Apple T2 chip in it (most Macs shipped prior to 2018), and resetting your SMC and your computer’s NVRAM doesn’t do anything, your next best bet is to get in touch with Apple, either on the phone, via chat, or in an Apple Store. If the real underlying issue is your hardware, they can fix it (though it might cost you if you’re out of warranty). Otherwise, they’ll have more tools at their disposal to diagnose and revive your machine.

If you’re using an Apple T2 and you have another Mac available, you may have another option. These Macs can be booted into a “DFU” recovery mode, much like iOS devices and Apple Silicon Macs. Using Apple’s instructions, you can connect your “bricked” Mac into a second Mac with a USB or Thunderbolt cable and use the Apple Configurator app to restore its firmware. If the Mac is bootable once its firmware is restored, you should be able to use Internet Recovery or a USB install drive to get a clean install of macOS up and running on the system. Apple Silicon Macs can be recovered in a similar manner.

The downside to a DFU restore is that it will totally wipe your Mac’s internal storage. If you keep decent backups, then it’s worth the hassle to get your computer working again. If you have vitally important data stored on your Mac and nowhere else, or if the DFU restore doesn’t work, then contacting Apple should be your next step.

The best way to avoid problems is not to update your Mac until Apple has released a couple of major bugfix updates for Monterey, which is usually smart to do with any new software release, whether there are widespread reports of problems or not. Apple’s security updates for Catalina and Big Sur do often include the same firmware updates that the new operating system includes—this is necessary for patching firmware-level security vulnerabilities—so if the problem actually is caused or exposed by the new firmware updates, avoiding Monterey might not help. But assuming that the problems are being caused by some combination of new firmware updates, hidden underlying hardware issues with individual Macs, and a new major OS update, staying on Big Sur or Catalina for a couple more months can at least remove one variable from that equation.

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